Monday, September 3, 2018

Rosh Hashanah begins Sunday eve September 9, through Tuesday night, September 11, 2018. Browse our collection of short films, inspiring essays, family activities, recipes and more at High Holidays.

CALENDAR AND HOLIDAYS
 
Rosh Hashanah begins Sunday eve September 9, through Tuesday night, September 11, 2018. Browse our collection of short films, inspiring essays, family activities, recipes and more at High Holidays.
 ABC's of Rosh Hashanah 
 ABC's of Rosh Hashanah 
 A handy checklist of everything you need to know for Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year. 
 by Rabbi Shraga Simmons 
 

Pre-Rosh Hashanah

A key component of Rosh Hashanah preparation is to ask for forgiveness from anyone we may have wronged during the previous year. To the greatest extent possible, we want to begin the year with a clean slate – and without anyone harboring a grudge against us. Similarly, we should be quick to forgive those who have wronged us.
Many people have the custom of going to the mikveh before Rosh Hashanah after midday. A mikveh, which has the power to purify from certain types of spiritual impurities, can be an important part of the teshuva process.

 
  

  

  

The Shul with the Coffin

by Rabbi Benjamin Blech

  

Weekly Torah Portion Click Here...
 
Today's Quote – Elul 23
Faults in Others
Today's Photo – Elul 23
Visiting IDF Soldiers
An IDF soldier gets a surprise visit at the end of basic training.
 
   
     
     
 
 

PLO SAYS CUTTING OFF MONEY TO TERRORISTS

 WILL CAUSE TERROR

 
Terrorists really hate it when you cut off their income stream. But the only thing that causes more terrorism than not funding terrorists, is funding them. So it's a good thing we may actually move part of the way to not doing that. Even if the terrorists are most unhappy.
Palestinian officials on Saturday said the Trump administration's decision to stop funding for the United Nations agency that provides aid to Palestinian refugees would promote extremism.
Palestine's presidential spokesman Nabil Abu Rudaineh said the decision"does not serve peace; rather, it promotes terrorism in the region."
"This is an assault on the rights of the Palestinian people, and part of a series of anti-Palestinian U.S. decisions and policies," Rudaineh said.
UPI quotes that as coming from "Palestine", but even if you grant the existence of such a political entity, there are two of them, Hamas and the PLO. 
UNRWA very clearly promoted Hamas.
Putting money into UNRWA was indirectly funding Hamas, whose personnel are employed by UNRWA, and which has made use of UNRWA facilities.
Funding terrorism only causes more terror. While terrorists may lash out when their funding is pulled, it's the funding that permits terrorists to operate, to threaten and to cause harm.

Feinstein under the microscope for Kavanaugh hearing

Feinstein under the microscope for Kavanaugh hearing

   
Feinstein under the microscope for Kavanaugh hearing
Sen. Dianne Feinstein is under intense pressure heading into Brett Kavanaugh's Supreme Court confirmation hearing.
His nomination puts the 85-year-old California senator, who is seeking reelection, at the center of one of the Senate’s most partisan fights of the year. If confirmed, Kavanaugh, 53, is expected to tilt the Supreme Court to the right for years by giving conservatives a fifth vote on a host of controversial issues.
The nationally televised hearing will be a high-profile test for Feinstein, the top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee who has taken fire from progressives worried that her collegial personality is out of touch with the environment of the Trump era.
Activists want her and other Democrats on the committee to use the days-long confirmation hearing, scheduled to start Tuesday morning, to hammer Kavanaugh on issues ranging from executive authority to women’s healthcare.
“If Senator Feinstein doesn’t hold Brett Kavanaugh’s feet to the fire and hold Republicans feet to the fire for the ram job that they’re trying to push here, it is to her detriment in a Senate race,” said Neil Sroka, a spokesman for Democracy for America, which endorsed Kevin De Leon in his race against Feinstein.
California has what’s known as a jungle primary, which allows the top two candidates to compete in the general election, regardless of party affiliation. De Leon is considered to be further to the left than Feinstein.
Liberal activists widely expect Feinstein to ultimately vote “no” on Kavanaugh, but they’re concerned that she and other Democrats are normalizing Trump by saying they’re still on the fence almost two months after Kavanaugh’s nomination.
Brian Fallon, a spokesman for Demand Justice and former aide for Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.), warned that committee Democrats cannot treat Kavanaugh’s nomination like “business as usual."
“The Republicans are playing for keeps here,” he said. “We need Dianne Feinstein and the other Democrats on the panel to respond accordingly.”
Feinstein has kept her strategy close to her vest in the lead-up to Kavanaugh’s hearing, but she highlighted three issues during a conference call with reporters on Friday: Roe v. Wade, guns and Kavanaugh’s views on executive power, including prosecuting or investigating a sitting president.
“These are just a few areas we expect to explore during next week’s hearing and we welcome you all to listen,” Feinstein said.
Despite being the ranking Democrat on the committee, Feinstein has remained tight lipped about what she discussed with Kavanaugh during their hour-long meeting last month.
Spokespeople for Feinstein didn’t respond to a request for comment on how the senator is preparing for the hearing.
This is hardly the first time Feinstein has come under fire from her base.
Known for her old-school collegiality in an increasingly partisan Senate, Feinstein was booed during a town hall event in San Francisco last year when she said she didn’t support a single-payer health-care system. Attendees urged her to stand up more forcefully to the Trump administration.
She faced similar scrutiny during a fight over Trump’s pick to lead the CIA after she initially told reporters that she thought Gina Haspel had been a “good” deputy director at the agency. Feinstein then spent days hardening her position against Haspel and voted against the nominee, who ended up getting confirmed.
But Feinstein has honed in on the Supreme Court fight during her reelection bid. Speaking to supporters in Oakland, Calif., in July she touted her role as the top Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, saying that “we will put together a kind of message, I hope, for the American people which will enable those Democrats to vote along with us.”
Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), the No. 2 Senate Democrat and a fellow member of the Judiciary Committee, praised Feinstein for her role in pushing back against Republicans handling of Kavanaugh’s nomination, including their refusal to request documents from Kavanaugh’s time working as White House staff secretary under former President George W. Bush.
“She has led us, I think, effectively in protesting the treatment of documents. This is a dramatic departure from the tradition of the Senate,” Durbin told The Hill, adding that Republicans are trying to “conceal a lot of information on this nominee.”
Whether Feinstein will be able to hammer Kavanaugh enough to quell progressive skeptics remains to be seen.
“I think she can,” said Heidi Hess, the co-director of CREDO Action. “Whether she will or not is a different question. I think that is absolutely what progressives expect.”
Kavanaugh’s hearing comes as progressives are already fuming over what they argue is a lack of cohesive Democratic strategy on Supreme Court nominees. That anger is boiling over after Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Democrats agreed to clear a tranche of lower court nominees for Trump before taking an extended Labor Day break.
Sroka said activists are trying to figure out “what the hell Chuck Schumerthinks he’s doing and trying to get him in line with … actually getting the Democratic caucus united against Kavanaugh.”
But while progressive frustration starts with Schumer, it runs down to other members of leadership and rank-and-file senators who have yet to formally come out against Kavanaugh, including Durbin and Sen. Chris Coons (D-Ill.), another member of the Judiciary Committee.
“They need to be doing more,” Hess said when asked if she thought Democrats on the committee were united. “You are on a committee to serve the country not just your constituents.”
Democrats have defended their party colleagues who want to wait until the hearing before they make, or at least announce, a decision.
“We have a process, and I’m respectful of the process,” Durbin told The Hill. “And there will be an end to that process where I announce my vote.”
He added that “announcing it earlier rather than later, may be of some value politically to somebody, but I just think most Americans expect us to carefully review [Kavanaugh’s] record and fairly evaluate him.”
Democrats on the committee have repeatedly argued that this confirmation process has been rushed by Republicans who want to confirm Kavanaugh before the Supreme Court starts its next term in the first week of October.
But Democrats have so far shot down some of the tactics urged by progressives.
Fallon, during a conference call with reporters, noted that his group would support Democrats boycotting Kavanaugh’s hearing. Democratic members of the Judiciary Committee say that strategy isn’t on the table.
“I think we have a constitutional obligation to ask questions and make them tough questions so that the American people understand what his views are,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.). “If we permit our Republican colleagues to be the only ones asking questions, the American people certainly will never know what his views are before the vote.”
Other progressive activists said it wasn’t so much about Democrats boycotting the hearing but making sure they do something to show their voters that they aren’t just playing a game of kabuki on the Supreme Court fight.
“The real fear is that the Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee [will] make this look like it’s just a normal process that’s going on here, when what we’ve really got is an attempt by Republicans to ram through a right-wing justice for a lifetime appointment,” Sroka said.
Hess added that while she agreed with boycotting in theory, Senate Democrats hadn’t laid the groundwork for effectively using that tactic.
“Democrats should use any tools at their disposal to slow down the hearings,” she said, “to interrupt business as usual to the degree that they can procedurally...as brave leaders and not just folks who are trying to maintain decorum.”
   
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THE DEMS, THE LEFT AND THE BLACK COMMUNITY HAVE A FARRAKHAN PROBLEM

 
Why was Louis Farrakhan, the racist leader of the Nation of Islam, which even most of the left will acknowledge is a racist hate group, a few steps away from Bill Clinton, front and center, at Aretha Franklin's funeral? 
The same reason he was at a Congressional Black Caucus meeting smiling with Obama.
The same reason top Black Lives Matter and Women's March figures either praise him or refuse to disavow him.
Farrakhan is a racist and an anti-Semite. He has praised Hitler, suggested that Jews were using pot to make black men gay, and spewed every possible hateful and ugly thing that the left claims to disavow. But while he may in theory be unacceptable in society, he is a major and mainstream figure within the black community. That's why scenes like these keep playing out.
The Dems have a winking relationship with Farrakhan. They meet with him quietly and pretend he's not there most of the time. They call him Minister Farrakhan when they're asked to disavow him. And Calypso Louie keeps on grinning because he's got photos with them.
Just like he did with Obama.
And when he feels like it, he can release them.
Farrakhan's existence, his prominence, puts the lie to the myth that racism is an exclusively white problem. And the only way for the left to deal with that is a combination of whataboutism and ignoring the issue.
But Farrakhan is a symptom. He's front and center because sizable portions of the black community, including its elites, want him there. He's there because black leaders, new and old, reckon with his influence, or find him inspiring, including the new generation like Tamika Mallory. And yes, that includes his virulent racism and anti-Semitism. It all fits into the black nationalist package.
The problem isn't Farrakhan. The problem is tolerance for racism in the black community internally and tolerance for it externally on the left. Without those things, Farrakhan wouldn't have been standing a few feet away from a former president. 
The black community has a racism problem. Farrakhan is the symptom.

NEIL ARMSTRONG CRITICIZED

 OBAMA'S ABANDONMENT OF

 AMERICA'S SPACE PROGRAM 

(Obama, The 

UN-American President)

 
Neil Armstrong, the first man on the moon, was a humble man. He avoided much of the attention that came his way from the media. While he cultivated friendships and relationships with unexpected figures in private, he didn't much like the media. Or talking about himself. One of his final interviews was to an Australian accounting group. Which should summarize how much he liked the media.
First Man cynically exploits Armstrong's humility, his unwillingness to express strong opinions about what he did, to justify the movie's political decision not to show the pivotal movement in which the American flag was planted on the moon.
This censorship has nothing to do with Armstrong and everything to do with a basic hostility to American greatness.
While Armstrong was largely apolitical, like many of his comrades, he felt strongly about space policy. And was less shy about expressing his views there. 
Obama's dismantling of the American space program while outsourcing transportation to Russia led to an uncharacteristic rebuke from Armstrong, as I documented in my extensive piece on Obama's destruction of the space program, Muslim Self-Esteem or the Stars.
Obama claimed that he wanted to retain a working space shuttle. In office however he scrapped the shuttles leaving the United States wholly dependent on Russian Soyuz rockets. Around the time that Bolden was telling America that we would not go to the moon, his skeleton of a space agency, now concerned with Muslim outreach and Global Warming, was paying the Russian space agency $424 million for six Soyuz seats.
“By buying the services of space transportation, rather than the vehicles themselves, we can continue to ensure rigorous safety standards are met,” Obama said at the John F. Kennedy Space Center.
Quoting him, Neil Armstrong wrote, “It was asserted that by buying taxi service to Low Earth Orbit rather than owning the taxis, “we can continue to ensure rigorous safety standards are met”. The logic of that statement is mystifying.”
That part of Armstrong's career, like the state of the space program under Obama, will be elided.
But Neil Armstrong did his part to make America great. Obama and his leftist allies did and are doing their part to make it small. The petty decision to censor the flag is small. It is the smallness of small people whose petty malice is thinly disguised as principle.
The same sort of people who would turn the space program into a Muslim self-esteem and global warming factory would censor the flag. And it's a good thing that their scope has been reduced from running NASA to acts of cinematic revisionist history like Hidden Figures or First Man.
(Photo credit: NASA)


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